"This day is sacred to the Lord your God. Do not mourn or weep. Go and
celebrate with a feast of choice foods and sweet drinks, and share gifts of
food with people who have nothing prepared. This is a sacred day before our
Lord. Do not be dejected and sad, for the joy of the Lord is your
strength!" Nehemiah 8:9-10

"Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again:
Rejoice!" Philippians 4:4

FOREWORD
Far more earnestly than we know, does God want us to be happy. It grieves a
true human father to see his children unhappy. Our heavenly Father is pained
and disappointed when his children on the earth are discontented and
anxious, or when they do not rejoice. This little book is a call to joy,
to Christian joy, and to joy that will make joy in others!

JOY is the highest attainment of life. It comes from
godly living—and is marred by sin. It is music without a note of
discord. It is motion without a trace of friction. It is health
without the slightest sickness. It is pleasure unalloyed.

Says one, "Joy is the greatest paradox of life. It can
grow in any soil, and live under any conditions. It defies environment. It
comes from within; it is the revelation of the depths of the inner life—as
light and heat proclaim the sun from which they radiate. Joy consists not of
having—but of being; not of possessing—but of enjoying. It is
the warm glow of a heart, at peace with itself."

Joy is deeper than happiness. Happiness is the
fruit of prosperous conditions. It is the outcome of fortuitous
happenings, of favorable circumstances. Joy is independent of circumstances.
It dwells in the heart—as a never-failing fountain. Happiness laughs when
the sun shines—but grows sad when clouds gather. Joy sings on in all
weathers and in all experiences.

Joy is the ideal of Christian life. God is joyful; we
cannot conceive of him as unhappy. As he is love—so he is also joy, and his
joy, like all his attributes, is infinite and eternal.

Only once in the Bible is God said to sing, and then it
is in his love for his own people. "He will rejoice over you with joy; he
will rest in his love; he will joy over you with singing." The thought is
exquisite in its meaning. God's joy never fails. He is never dismayed or
disturbed by calamities. It was said of Christ, "He will not fail nor be
discouraged." Life's mysteries break our joy, for we cannot understand their
meaning. But there are no mysteries with God, and therefore his joy is never
dimmed.

To grow toward God's likeness and become more and more
filled with his life—is to grow in joy. It would seem that few of those who
are followers of Christ reach the life of joy, to which the Master calls
them. How many even of godly people, are ever cast down! Our Christian faith
claims that we never should be discouraged, never should lose our gladness.
But how many of us live up to this profession? Yet should we not do so? Is
God not able to help us to rejoice always? If it is our privilege and our
duty to attain a joy which shall never lose its song, is God not able to
help us to reach this height? We say he never requires of us an
impossibility. Everything God asks us to do—we can do through his help.
Surely it is not too hard for God to enable us to live a life of joy.

This is not a New Testament lesson only; it is taught
also in the Old Testament. The ancient festivals were full of song and
gladness. On the most joyous of them all, the feast of tabernacles, they
made the coverings of branches so thin, so open, that the stars could be
seen through them, suggesting that nothing should ever hide the stars
from our eyes. It was in a great festival of Old Testament times, that this
lesson of joy received one of its most impressive enforcements. It was after
the return of the captives and the rebuilding of Jerusalem. The law had been
read, and the reading produced weeping. "All the people wept, when they
heard the words of the law!" God's word is not intended to make people sad.
Just why it produced this effect that day we are not told. Perhaps the
people had not heard the law read for a long time—and it proved painful
reading because it reminded them of their sins. The law showed them the
holiness of God, with its impeccable purity—and as they looked into the
mirror they saw their own faults and imperfections and the vision alarmed
them. This grieved them, made them ashamed, and they wept.

But the weeping was not pleasing to Nehemiah. Sadness was
not the effect he wished to see in the people. It was not in harmony with
the day. "This day is holy unto Jehovah your God; mourn not, nor weep." The
day belonged to God, and he does not want any day of his stained with tears.
Sorrow is always sacred to God. He looks upon it with compassion. He enters
into it with sympathy. Pain and trouble in his children, appeal to the heart
of God with wondrous directness. We know that he is never indifferent to any
sadness.

But the weeping of the people in this case was because of
their sins. Is it not right to grieve over wrong things we have done? We
know that penitence is always pleasing to God. "You do not delight in
sacrifice, or I would bring it; you do not take pleasure in burnt offerings.
The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O
God, you will not despise." There is no more precious thing on earth—than a
tear shed in sorrow for sin. God loves such weeping, because it tells of a
heart returning to him.

Yet the grief of the people that day was not approved by
their teachers. It was not beautiful, they said. It was not in keeping with
the spirit of the day. A great festival was in progress, and only joy was
appropriate. "This day is holy unto Jehovah your God; mourn not, nor weep."
There seems to have been something in their sorrow which was defiling.
We remember that when the sons of Aaron had offered the strange fire
and died before the Lord, Moses forbade any exhibition of grief over their
tragic death. "Do not mourn by letting your hair hang loose or by tearing
your clothes." Any expression of grief in the terrible circumstances,
would have appeared to be a complaint against what God had done. They were
not, by word, act, or look—to show anything but the most perfect submission
to the divine judgment. These men had disobeyed God and had been stricken
down because of their sin. There must be reverent and complete
acquiescence even in the crushing grief. Besides, the priests were
engaged in acts of divine worship which must not be interrupted even by the
most bitter experiences of sorrow. Their service in the tabernacle was holy
unto the Lord, and anything that would break into it would be sin. Duty must
go on in the midst of deepest grief.

Nehemiah this day stilled the noise of the people's
weeping and called them to enter into the joy of the occasion. "This day is
sacred to the LORD your God. Do not mourn or weep! Go and enjoy choice food
and sweet drinks, and send some to those who have nothing prepared. This day
is sacred to our Lord. Do not grieve, for the joy of the LORD is your
strength!"

A day devoted to the Lord should be a glad day. It
is a day full of the presence of God, and the presence of God should not
make us sad. It should not inspire dread and terror. There is nothing in God
to make us fear or to cause us to grieve. God is love. He is
not our enemy; he is our friend. He does not cherish thoughts of anger
toward us—but thoughts of peace. It does not distress us to meet a
human friend who has in his heart peace and good will toward us. A day with
such a one, would never sadden us. We would not spend it weeping. It would
seem strange indeed if when we enter our friend's presence, we should break
out into wailing. The presence of God is sunshine; it is brightness. It
hides no dangers. Its every influence is joy. It should inspire joy.

Some people are indeed afraid of God, but it is because
they have wrong thoughts of him. A woman said "I am afraid of God—but I love
Jesus Christ, and have no fear of him." This was because she misunderstood
God. God was terror to her because she thought of him only as anger,
justice, fury. She thought of God only as an avenger. She thought of
Jesus as mercy and love. She supposed he had come to take us out of the
hands of a wrathful God. She hated God—but loved Jesus Christ. Yet this is
not the truth about God. It was God who loved the world and gave his Son to
be its Savior. God and Christ are one. Christ is God revealed in human life.
Christ is the mercy of God. God is our Father, having in him all
tenderness, all compassion, all goodness. It is only when we misunderstand
God, that we can be afraid of him. We cannot weep when we are in the
presence of God, if we have the true thought of his gracious love to his
people. Our sorrow will be swallowed up in the joy that the divine presence
inspires in us.

We need to think of this when we are in grief. Perhaps
the fact that we are Christians, does not always mean as much to us as it
should in such experiences. Do we bear pain and trial differently from the
way in which unbelievers do? When we have a great sorrow—do we stop to think
of our relation to Christ and ask how we ought to bear ourselves as his
friends? Does it ever occur to us that our excessive grief may not please
God, that it may mar the beauty of our fellowship with him, that we may sin
by indulging it overmuch? "This day is sacred to the LORD your God. Do not
mourn or weep!"

We know that sorrow is sacred with God. "Blessed
are those who mourn," runs the beatitude. "Comfort, comfort my people," is
God's word to the messengers of his love, whom he sends out to the sad and
suffering ones of earth. To those who are in sorrow, he gives the assurance,
"As one whom his mother comforts—so will I comfort you."

The Bible is full of divine sympathy with human grief.
When we lay our head upon God's Word, we feel the beating of a heart of
infinite love and compassion. God hears our songs of joy—but He hears also
the dropping of our tears, and the throbbing of our hearts when we suffer.
He hears the cries and groans of His child—every pang of distress. It is a
measureless comfort to us—to know that our Savior is able to sympathize with
our weaknesses.

The gentle sympathy of God with our human weakness and
pain—is one of the most marvelous qualities of the divine character, and is
infinite in its comfort. To know that God sympathizes with us in our every
pang, that He cares when we are in distress, brings Him very near to us and
makes our pain very sacred.

We must not think that God is angry with our tears, or
forbids us to grieve. Jesus Himself wept when His friend had died and when
He sat with the sorrowing ones and saw their anguish. He sympathizes with us
all in our pain. It is not grief which He condemns or forbids—but excessive
grief, grief that is unsubmissive to His holy and sovereign will. Even the
grace of God does not make our hearts less tender. It does not dull our
feelings so that pain hurts us less. We do not suffer less in our
sorrow—because we love Christ.

One way God helps us—is by making us strong to bear pain
and to endure suffering. He also brings the great truths and facts of
Scripture before us, in such a way that we see how blessing and good will
come to us out of pain and loss, and receive the strength that divine grace
imparts.

Comfort is a reality—not a mere sentiment.
Sorrow is not actually taken away—it is turned into joy. Our trouble is not
removed from us, and our senses are not dulled and made incapable of pain.
We weep still—but our tears are struck through now with the light of heaven.
"I will give them comfort and joy, instead of sorrow." Jeremiah 31:13. "You
shall be sorrowful—but your sorrow shall be turned into joy." John 16:20

"He comforts us in all our affliction!" 2 Corinthians
1:4. We sin, therefore, in our sorrow—if we refuse to be comforted. We are
God's children and our Father's love includes all the affairs of our lives.
He watches over us with infinite affection. When He ordains us to suffer—He
will not let the suffering hurt us, however painful the experience may be.
In all times of danger—He hides us away in the secret of His love where no
evil can touch us. His purpose always is to use pain to make us better, to
purify and enrich our lives, to mature our graces. He wants us to submit
ourselves in confidence and trust, to His holy will and to accept our
sufferings with cheerful spirit. "Mourn not, nor weep," is ever the message
of divine love. Sadness should never be the mood of God's children, however
painful their experiences. Refusing to be comforted, is never Christlike.

Nehemiah marked out for the people, a way of duty.
Instead of giving way to weeping, when they thought of their sins—he sent
them to a service that would lead them to joy. "He said unto them, Go and
celebrate with a feast of choice foods and sweet drinks. This is a sacred
day before our Lord. Do not be dejected and sad, for the joy of the Lord is
your strength!"

Passive grief is not the penitence which God
desires us to nourish when we have sinned. He desires repentance, and
then turning to him in joyful obedience. We are not to waste our time
in vain regret and idle grieving, when we have done foolishly. Instead, we
are to begin at once to rebuild what sin has destroyed, and enter at once
upon a beautiful life.

A poet tells of walking in his garden one morning after a
storm. There he saw a torn bird's nest lying on the ground—part of
the ruin the storm had wrought. The poet had a gentle heart and began to
pity the birds in the loss they had suffered. But as he stood there under
the tree, thinking sadly of what had happened, he heard chattering voices
above him, and looking up he saw the birds busy at the rebuilding of their
ruined nest. So it should be with us, when disaster has come to us. We
should not waste a moment in grieving over the ruin—but should quickly begin
to rebuild our place with joy and trust. The days are holy unto the Lord,
and the only way to spend holy days—is to devote them to ministries of love.

That is what Nehemiah bade his people to do. They had
sinned—but they were not to give a moment to grieving over their folly
and evil. There was not an instant to waste. The only true thing to do,
was to set about the doing of their duty. First, they were to celebrate the
festival in their own homes. "Go and celebrate with a feast of choice foods
and sweet drinks." God loves gladness. He wants his children to be happy.
Worship in Old Testament days was to find its expression in feasting.
Certain parts of the offerings brought to the altar were to be consumed in
the holy fire, and then certain parts were to be given back to the worshiper
to be eaten by himself and his family. With these portions, sacred because
they had been given to God, he was to hold a feast in his own house, not a
feast of revelry—but of pure feasting. A holy day was not a solemn,
sad day—but a day bright with joy, a festival day.

Too often, even in the Christian church, religion has
been misrepresented as something somber and without gladness. Men have
thought of God as terrible, not a happy friend to whom they could come with
glad heart—but one before whom they could appear only with awe and dread.
Children have been frightened with the warning that God saw them, and
would punish them—as if that was God's chief business with them. The
worship of God has been represented as observed without joy. But this
is an utterly false representation of the divine character. God is love, and
love is joy. He is the blessed God, the happy God. The religion of Christ is
all gladness. We are taught to rejoice in the Lord. There are more calls in
the Bible to praise—than there are even to pray. Holiness is
gladness. Jesus Christ was ushered into the world with a burst of angels'
songs. His life on the earth was full of joy. He was a sufferer—but he
illumined every sorrow he endured, with shining gladness. He was the
light of the world. His teaching was full of beatitudes, blesseds.

All the highest expressions of the religious spirit are
in song. The Jews here at Jerusalem were commanded to cease their
weeping and in their own homes to celebrate with a feast of choice foods and
sweet drinks. Emphasis was thus put upon the true holiness of home.
It was there, and not in the temple, that they were to celebrate the
essential part of the worship. It was to be celebrated, too, as a glad
family meal—and not as a burdensome, solemn ritual. They were to find the
gladness, not the sorrow; the sweetness, not the bitterness; the best of
everything, not the worst. The day was holy to the Lord and there were not
to be tears—but songs.

Another feature of the day, was loving thought of others.
They were to eat the fat and drink the sweet at home—but they were also to
send portions unto those for whom nothing had been prepared, for the day was
holy. Part of the holiness is always loving service. We are
never to eat our bread alone; we are to share it. "It is better to be
lost—than to be saved all alone!" says one. In Job's self-justification,
when his friends had spoken bitterly against him, he says, among other
things: "Have I refused to help the poor, or crushed the hopes of widows who
looked to me for help? Have I been stingy with my food and refused to share
it with hungry orphans? No! from childhood I have cared for orphans, and all
my life I have cared for widows. Whenever I saw someone who was homeless and
without clothes, did they not praise me for providing wool clothing to keep
them warm? If my arm has abused an orphan because I thought I could get away
with it, then let my shoulder be wrenched out of place! Let my arm be torn
from its socket!" Job 31:16-22

We may never eat our morsel alone—while others are
hungry. This lesson was taught thus emphatically in the Old Testament, and
still more earnestly in the New Testament. In the Lord's Prayer we
are taught to pray not for our own bread alone—but for bread for others as
well. "Give us this day our daily bread." While we are
feasting at our own table—we must remember those who are hungry outside, and
send portions to them. The days are holy—all the days are holy, and no day
set aside for God, must be stained by selfishness.

The direction to the people was, "Go and celebrate with a
feast of choice foods and sweet drinks, and share gifts of food with
people who have nothing prepared." This was in keeping with the teaching of
the Bible throughout. The poor were always to be remembered. The
stranger was never to be forgotten. He who let the needy go hungry when
he had plenty on his own table—was severely condemned. In the New Testament
the lesson was taught with marked emphasis. Generosity is a quality
of all true Christian character. To think only of ourselves, and give no
thought to others—is contrary to the spirit of Christ, which teaches us
always to share our plenty with those who lack. Stinginess is always
condemned. Generosity is always praised.

Generosity is a large word. It has a root which means
excellence, goodness. It is a noble word. Its first definition in the
dictionary is "nobility; the order of nobles." A Prussian order of
distinction, founded in 1665, bears the name The Order of Generosity.
The word generous was applied only to the good, the brave, the noble.

Christ was generous. He had largeness of heart,
magnanimity. He taught his followers to be generous. The lack of generosity
in one who calls himself a Christian, is a blot on his name! It marks him as
unworthy. It dishonors him—as cowardice dishonors the name of him who calls
himself a man.

The brightest deeds that shine in the story of humanity,
are the deeds of generosity. Generosity does not merely return good for
good; does not merely measure its giving—by what it has
received. Like Christly love, it blesses the hand that has smitten, it
repays cruelty with gentleness, it serves most unselfishly, those who have
done the sorest wrong.

Generosity is the perfect flower of love. It does not
think who it is that needs—but gives and serves the unworthiest.
It thinks only of the fact there is one for whom nothing has been prepared,
and sends a portion to him, that he may share the feast of choice foods and
sweet drinks.

It is this spirit which glorifies true Christmas
giving. Christmas is a wonderful day. It works miracles of love
all over the world. Its feast is kept with joy and song in countless
Christian homes. But the true glory of Christmas, is seen in what it does
among the poor, in prisons and hospitals and
orphanages and refuges of all kinds, where it brings its portion
for those for whom nothing has been prepared. Love is very sweet—when it
pours out its gifts for those who love us. But love reaches its sweetest and
divinest—when it brings its blessings to those who do not love us, perhaps,
who will never thank us, nor remember what we have done, nor return
gratitude for our kindness.

Let us cultivate the spirit of generosity, thinking ever
in our enjoyment of God's goodness—of those who lack the blessings we enjoy,
and sending to them love's portion. Thus shall we continue the work
which our Lord began in this world. Thus shall we enlarge our own hearts,
and the ministry of love we have been sent here to perform. Thus shall we
come nearer and nearer to those who need us, and more and more able to be a
blessing to them. For we never can reach others—by seeking to have them love
us; we can do them good, only by loving them.

This is a lesson we cannot learn too well, nor fix too
deeply in our hearts. We sometimes forget that nothing is given to us—for
ourselves alone. When an abundance of blessing or prosperity in any
form comes to us—we may not shut ourselves in with it and use it only for
ourselves. We are only God's almoners, and the good we have
received, we are to dispense to others who need. Peter's mistake
on the Transfiguration Mount, was in wanting to build tabernacles and stay
there with the Lord and the heavenly visitants, keeping the glorious vision
to themselves. The duty was rather to go down from the splendor of the
mountaintop, to carry the holy light into the darkness of the world below.

Ever this is our duty, when we have eaten the fat, and
drunk the sweet of any blessing at our own table. We are to think of those
outside who have no such blessing or favor as we are enjoying, and are to
send portions to them.

At the close of this beautiful home incident, we have a
word which has become classical in the Scriptures because of its
far-reaching meaning. "The joy of the Lord is your strength." The joy
of the Lord is not earth's joy—that joy which comes from earthly pleasures
and earthly possessions; but the joy which comes from knowing God and from
being his child. This is a joy which the world could not give—and cannot
take away; but which belongs to all who truly believe in God. It is a joy
which is not dependent upon health or upon riches or upon
human friends or upon worldly honors; it is the joy of the
Lord, and can come only from him and through his love. There are those who
have it—and yet are continual sufferers. Everything that is supposed to be
essential to earthly happiness, may be lacking—and yet the heart may have
joy that abides unbroken through all the pain and loss!

Some great calamity may befall a believer in God, almost
hopelessly destroying his last resource of happiness in this life, leaving
suffering or sorrow which it seems never can be healed or
comforted—and yet the fountain of pain becomes a new spring of joy.

It is said that during the siege of Sebastopol, a Russian
shell buried itself in the side of a hill outside the city and a spring of
water burst out of the torn ground and became a flowing fountain. The weary
soldiers drank of the pure, sweet water during all the siege.

Just so, the wounds and hurts of life which
seem to destroy beauty and joy—only open new sources of gladness.

Every Christian should have this joy. It is part of his
inheritance. His heart should be filled with it. But is there really much
joy of such in the hearts of those who call themselves Christians? We
rejoice when all things go well with us, when we have friends, ease, money,
health, and prosperous circumstances. But when we lose these happy
conditions—our joy departs. Having God we should rejoice—though all things
have been taken from us. Whatever sorrow is ours—our joy should continue.
Its source is in God's own heart—and this fountain can never fail.

This joy of the Lord, is said to be our strength.
It makes us strong. Sadness makes us weak. When joy departs—strength leaves
us, and we faint by the way. If you would continue strong—you must keep joy.
No one can do his work well—if he is unhappy. It is said of a great artist,
that he always carried a lyre when he was painting. The music inspired his
art. Happiness is always an inspiration. Without it our work is never the
best we could do. Joy exhilarates and inspires—but sorrow depresses. Yet not
all joy makes men strong. The world's joy does not. Sin is enervating. It is
only pure joy that makes us strong. "The joy of the Lord is
your strength."

In a marginal reading the words are: "The joy of the Lord
is your stronghold." We find safety in it. It is a refuge.
Sadness never is a refuge. Grief is not a shelter for us. It is full of
danger. Times of trouble—are times of peril. We are weak when we are
depressed and disheartened. Joy makes us brave. It nerves us for struggle
and for burden-bearing. We cannot be defeated—while we are strong.
Temptation's power over us cannot prevail—while joy fills our hearts.

Joy is springtime to our lives. It pours warmth
and sunshine everywhere, and in the soft atmosphere all things grow
beautiful. The life which joy inspires, becomes rich in its loveliness
and fruitfulness.

Joy puts us in the mood for service. We love
others easily—when we have the joy of the Lord in us. It is not hard to he
unselfish and self-denying, if we are happy with Christian joy. We are ready
to endure any sacrifice for the sake of others, if we are joyful.

"The joy of the Lord is your strength." We have much yet
to learn, most of us, before we become the Christian optimists we
ought to be. We say we should have joy, and in the bright days we
sing—but the moment the clouds begin to gather, the songs die upon
our lips. The great mass of Christian people do not rejoice, do not sing.

If we would learn Nehemiah's lesson we would not
only change our lives, but would work a marvelous change in the
world we live in. Indeed, a large part of regeneration, is to become
happy. Robert Louis Stevenson spoke truly when he said, "To be happy, is the
first step in being pious." You have gone a long way toward saintliness,
when you have learned to laugh.

When you have fully mastered the lesson, you will know
the deepest joy—when you are facing the storm. A vessel was crossing
the sea from Germany, a winter or two ago, having on board a cargo of
song birds. At first the air was soft and warm, and not a bird in all
the thousands sang a note. After a few days a storm arose and the weather
grew cold. Then one by one the birds began to sing, and soon all the
thousands of sweet songsters on the vessel were singing as if their
little throats would burst. When the joy of the Lord is in our hearts—the
wilder the storm, the fiercer the tempest, the more gladly do we sing!